Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Benefits of Armenia If Ratifying Protocols Before Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Benefits of Armenia If Ratifying Protocols Before Turkey

    HULIQ.com, SC
    April 17 2010


    Benefits of Armenia If Ratifying Protocols Before Turkey


    The position of the government of Armenia so far has been if Turkey
    ratifies the protocols, signed with Armenia last year to normalize
    relations, Armenia would move quickly ratifying it without any delays.
    Turkey is dragging the ratification of the those protocols in the
    parliament tying them to relations with Azerbaijan. But what if
    Armenia moves on and ratifies them first? Surprisingly, there are
    benefits here for the entire process.

    The reigning public opinion toward ratification of Turkish Armenian
    normalization protocols is that Armenia needs it more than Turkey
    because Turkey has closed its border with Armenia and will open it for
    trade after normalization is achieved. While there is truth in this
    Turkey needs that border to be open as much as Armenia. The eastern
    provinces of Turkey would benefit from the increased trade. Westward
    moving Armenian goods would pass through Turkey (not for free of
    course), and Turkish Armenian open border would serve as a trade link
    between Middle East and Russia. After all, Turkey did not close that
    border because it had a problem with Amenia, but because it made a
    sacrifice for Azerbaijan, siding with it in Nagorno Karabakh issue.

    The word "sacrifice" is important term here. As veteran Turkish
    journalist Mehmed Ali Birand writes in April 14th issue of Hurriyet,
    many in Turkey don't see the same mutual care and sacrifice in
    Azerbaijan for Turkish needs. Thus, Turkey is sacrificing its trade
    with Armenia and its EU ambitions by keeping a border with a
    neighboring country closed in the 21st century. Europeans, of course,
    do not understand this and say that an EU aspiring country should not
    have closed border with a neighbor.

    Thus, Turkey conditions ratifying the Armenian normalization protocols
    with Azerbaijan and Armenia weight for Turkish ratification to make
    its own move. But what would happen if Armenia becomes first to ratify
    those protocols?

    Many in Armenia may oppose this view. For them the concern is that
    Turkey and Azerbaijan will look at that as a sign o weakness. They
    think Turkey and Azerbaijan may conclude that Armenia was quick to
    ratify it because it needs the open border.

    However, the short answer is that Armenia should ratify the protocols
    first because when it signed them, it believed this is the right thing
    to do. Armenia should first ratify the protocols because that would
    show an international leadership of looking forward and beyond things.
    That would put Turkey in a very difficult position and possibly speed
    up the Nagorno Karabakh process as well.

    The dynamic of the international relations today considers reliable
    those countries that show leadership and stick to their word. Already
    for more than 6 months Turkey keeps saying left and right that it is
    faithful to its commitment to the protocols and taking necessary
    steps. The latest were in Washington. However, no practical steps are
    seen. Protocols are not ratified and the border is close.

    If Armenia, on the other hand, ratifies the protocols before Turkey
    that move will put Turkey in a very difficult and uneasy position in
    front of the international community. What would Turkey be able to say
    to the international community after Armenia ratifies those protocols?
    How would Turkey reason its own delay after that? It would put Turkey
    in a situation that unless the parliament takes an action ratifying
    the protocols the executive branch of the government will have
    tremendous difficulties explaining the Westerners and the Russians why
    it is unable to ratify the protocols.

    Then Turkey would have three options. The first, is to keep playing
    with the same rule sand dragging the issue demanding concessions from
    Armenia on Nagorno Karabakh issue. This option would be a weaker
    choice. Just today, the U.S. State Department said that the U.S. wants
    to see "Turkey and Armenia ratify those protocols, normalize
    relations, open borders." Thus, this first choice is less likely to be
    the followup if Armenia ratifies the protocols first.

    The second option for Turkey would be to follow Armenia and ratify
    those protocols immediately. Otherwise, they would risk being the
    unreliable partner in the region. Turkey, aspiring to be an EU member
    and a regional leader should not want the label of being unreliable.
    In case Armenia ratifies the protocols before April 24 (the date when
    Armenians commemorate the 1.5 million victims of the Armenian
    genocide) and Turkey does not followup it would give the U.S.
    president more grounds to keep his campaign promise and call the sad
    events in the Ottoman Empire as genocide. Turkish leadership is very
    sensitive to this definition and denies the genocide claim.

    The third option for Turkey is to help Azerbaijan to see the reality
    of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict and bring Azerbaijan to more
    constructive position, thus making a progress to the solution of
    Nagorno Karabakh issue. If Turkey follows the second option it would
    go without Azerbaijan. But if Turkey wants to keep its word given to
    Azerbaijan it may one day realize that Azerbaijan is being the problem
    in this conflict refusing to recognize people's right to self
    determination. So if Turkey can show Azerbaijan that after so many
    bellicose statements it's impossible to convince the Armenian
    population of Nagorno Karabakh to be back under Azerbaijan's control,
    then that would, in turn, speed up the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
    resolution. Then Azerbaijan may show signs that it is prepared to
    fully respect the UN charter on people's right to self determination,
    which in turn brings progress in Armenia Azerbaijan relations. This is
    what Turkey wanted to see in the past two decades.

    In our view, if Armenia ratifies the Turkish-Armenian normalization
    protocols Turkey will either go with the second or the third option.
    If Armenia ratifies the protocols early next week before April 24,
    considering there is less time for Turkey to convince Azerbaijan,
    Turkey may simply go with the second option. In fact, today Turkish
    foreign minister said he will leave for Baku and Tehran. In Baku he
    will discuss the dynamics of the recent Turk-Armenian and U.S.-Turkish
    meetings.

    Looking from the above perspective Armenia would benefit in many ways
    by becoming the first to ratify the protocols. It will seriously
    challenge Turkey by showing leadership in relations. After all,
    improving relations in the 21st century does not mean who needs it
    most. We all need better relations. This is why the European countries
    created EU.

    In conclusion, Armenian leadership and the decision making authorities
    know better and know more. They make their decisions based on
    information not available to us. This article is just a
    review-analysis. However, when Armenia and Turkey signed the protocols
    last year in Zurich to normalize mutual relations, they did not do it
    conditioning by other site's ratification, but because it was the
    right thing to do.

    Armenia signed the protocols because the government decided it meets
    the Armenian national interest and is a good political strategic
    decision. In the same way, it may well surprise Turkey and the
    international community by ratifying them because those two protocols
    meet its national interest and are good from strategic point of view.

    Written by Armen Hareyan
    HULIQ.com

    http://www.huliq.com/1/92749/be nefits-armenia-if-ratifying-protocols-turkey
Working...
X